Abstract

Global Navigation Satellite System (GNSS) water vapor tomography provides a four-dimensional (4-D) distribution of water vapor in the atmosphere for weather monitoring. It has developed into a widely used technique in numerical weather prediction (NWP). Vertical stratification is essential in discretizing the tomographic region. Traditional discretization methods divide the tomographic area into regular voxels with an equal height interval, which ignores the dynamic exponential distribution of water vapor. In recent years, non-uniform stratification methods have been widely validated by tomographic experiments. However, such experiments have not proposed a specific calculation method for stratification thickness. Therefore, in this paper, we introduced an adaptive non-uniform stratification method that follows the exponential distribution of water vapor in the tomographic region and presented the process of iterative calculation to acquire the optimal stratification interval. The proposed approach was applied based on the exponential decreasing trend in water vapor with increasing altitude. Moreover, it could adaptively calculate the interval of stratification height according to water vapor content. The tomographic experiments were performed using Global Positioning System (GPS) data from 19 ground-based stations in the Hong Kong Satellite Positioning Reference Station Network (SatRef) from 1 to 31 August 2019. The results indicated that, compared to the traditional stratification method, the root mean square error derived from the proposed approach was reduced by 0.26 g/m3. Additionally, severe weather can negatively affect the accuracy of the tomographic results. The results also showed that the accuracy of the tomographic results was reduced with increasing altitude. Moreover, the performance of the tomographic water vapor fields below 3000 m was improved by the proposed approach.

Highlights

  • Water vapor is one of the most important components in the troposphere

  • An adaptive non-uniform exponential stratification (ANES) approach was proposed for tomography in this paper, and its feasibility and superiority were validated using

  • The height interval of the lowest stratification obtained in each iteration is compared with the parameter of minimum height interval to gradually correct the estimated height interval starting from the bottom of the tomographic region

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Summary

Introduction

Water vapor is one of the most important components in the troposphere. It plays an important role in the transport of atmospheric energy and the evolution of convective weather. The concept of global positioning system (GPS) meteorology was first developed by Bevis et al [1] and has since been utilized by a large number of experiments. These experiments successfully retrieved the integrated water vapor (IWV) with accuracy up to 1–2 mm, which is comparable to water vapor radiometer (WVR) and radiosonde (RS), showing that GPS is a cost-effective, convenient and reliable tool for continuous monitoring of water vapor [2,3,4,5,6,7].

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